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MR. RYDERB BENEFIT

... positive treat the auditor- would take a high rank amongst contemporary impersonations were delineators /sps plentiful blackberries ; bat lagot are few and the great majority poor in both conception and execution, we most accord Mr. Ryder's representation ...

Published: Friday 07 June 1867
Newspaper: Liverpool Daily Post
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 178 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

pool and Leeds Canal Company, and the kerb, stone by the Board. It «ms ultimately agreed that the Clerk write

... Sunday morning last aha stack belonging Mr. Thomas hyth. y.rm. >r, of Aetley, was discovered to two' boys who were gathering blackberries in ah adjacent field They immediately acquainted Mi'. Lythgoe of the tact, and he wont and found it in flames. He procured ...

DANGEROUS RAILWAY CROSSINGS

... children were killed. On their return several witnesses were examined. It appeared that the children had gone out on • blackberrying excursion. On approaching the Church Path crossing over the railway they saw a goods train passing slowly. As soon as as ...

Published: Saturday 28 September 1867
Newspaper: Liverpool Weekly Courier
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 388 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

Royal Institution op Great Britain.—The annual meeting of the institution was held on Wednesday, Sir H. Holland ..

... (William Hunt.) The fine old oak tree Strathfieldsaye, and two forest pieces, an apple and strawberries, and apples ?fd blackberries 120 guineas. 78 (Edward Duncan.) ari ♦ Swollen Stream, the Lleder, an important work, near t° smaller examples, The Fort ...

Published: Saturday 04 May 1867
Newspaper: Manchester Courier
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Advertisement | Words: 530 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

Spectacles, Toubist, and Opeba G lasses. -Abonsbebq and Co Optician, 1, Levcrutreot, Piccadilly.—{AdVT, More ..

... 23,000 quarts, and 40,000 quarts were consumed at home. This makes crop of 249,358 quarts. It is said that the crop of blackberries will be fully as large, but of raspberries there will not so large crop. The Australian Trade.—The present year appears ...

Published: Saturday 10 August 1867
Newspaper: Manchester Courier
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Advertisement | Words: 698 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

THE RESULTS OE FEiNiAJSISM

... seemed desperately frightened. They s*fid they-live din the neighbourhood of Oldliamroad, Manchester, and had been gathering blackberries: in the woo d, but from their general ance their story seemed improbable, and they taken to the Fair field police station ...

Published: Saturday 28 September 1867
Newspaper: Ashton Reporter
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 709 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE

... with the evident intention of holding a caucus in the lobby. And now what is to be the upshot? Rumours, thick as blackberries, are already floating the atmosphere of St. Stephen's, and it is said—and I believe with some truth—that the chiefs of ...

Published: Saturday 04 May 1867
Newspaper: Liverpool Weekly Courier
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1044 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

Varieties

... bombshell, brave, battle, brigade. Barricade, boatswain, berth, bark, brigantine, Bumblebee, blue, barracan, bombayine. Blackberry, bugbear, beans, bacon, boiled beef. Broccoli, blood-sprinkled butcher, belief. Blasphemous, blabber, brag, backbite, belie ...

Published: Saturday 10 August 1867
Newspaper: Bury Times
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1051 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

NOTES OF THE WEEK

... been deserted his native followers, but had survived. Working Men’s Conservative Associations will soon bo “plentiful as blackberries” in Yorkshire. On Monday evening one was inaugurated at Kirkstall; and on Saturday the foundation of another was celebrated ...

Published: Saturday 14 December 1867
Newspaper: Preston Herald
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1227 | Page: 10 | Tags: none

last, as when he himself knocked at the outermost door, he wee like Chaucer's gentle Clerke of Oxenfortle. for ..

... another companion in the hollows near the river Wey. Three happy English girls at their small sports among the ripening blackberries and hopgardens of Alton, their mothers' cottages within hail, the public footpath close by '— what harm, in pity's name ...

TEMPERANCE LECTURES

... wines. But the great bulk of our wines of commerce were made from other bodies than grapes. They used to be made from black-berries and sloes. Now the refuse of the vineyard is worked up. Whisky, cider, elder-berries, sloes, sugar of lead, and many other ...

Published: Saturday 09 February 1867
Newspaper: Bury Times
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1736 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART

... to £500, if in perfect, genuine state. There is, however, much virtue in an if. Imperfect copies are nearly plenty as blackberries, but we do not believe that there are above dozen absolutely perfect ones known to exist. The library of the late A. R ...

Published: Tuesday 17 December 1867
Newspaper: Manchester Courier
County: Lancashire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1587 | Page: 3 | Tags: none